<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>Before the clouds appeared the rain came upon me.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Two months had passed in which Zarah had absolutely
failed to break her prisoners’ indomitable spirit; two
months in which her passion for the white man and her
hate for the white girl had grown deeper and fiercer.</p>
<p>With the density of some women, she clung with an
extraordinary and ridiculous tenacity to the belief that,
if she only threatened or cajoled enough and held her rival
up plainly enough to ridicule or contempt, she would ultimately
win Ralph Trenchard’s love.</p>
<p>Also did fear urge her to force or cajole him into
becoming her husband.</p>
<p>She knew her own men were blown like cotton threads
before every passing gust of their facile emotions, and
that their suddenly aroused hatred of Ralph Trenchard
had given place to genuine admiration; by that she had
come to realize she had no real hold over them and that,
where they had obeyed her father, the Sheikh, through
genuine love, they merely obeyed her because it pleased
them so to do.</p>
<p>She was just their nominal head. She pleased their
sense of beauty, and they almost worshipped her for her
courage in raids, but they were too well fed, too sure of
an unfailing supply of the necessities of life, too secure
against intrusion and interference to wish to relieve her
of the reins of government with its attendant burdens.</p>
<p>If they had formed one of the itinerant groups of
Bedouins which have to literally fight for their existence<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</SPAN></span>
as they flee across the desert, she knew they would not
have tolerated her for a day.</p>
<p>True, they made no effort to run counter to her orders
and to ameliorate the white man’s position. They considered
the rough hut he lived in on the far side of the
plateau, and the rough food sent him, quite good enough
for any infidel; but they greeted him with friendly shouts
when he arrived to teach them his tricks of cunning, and
did their best to beat him at his own game.</p>
<p>If it had not been for his overwhelming anxiety for the
future and for Helen, whom he knew, by hearsay, to be a
very slave to the tyrannical Arabian, Ralph Trenchard
would not have complained of his life or his treatment.
True, he hated the half-caste, who did his best to humiliate
him in the eyes of the men and, in a moment of forgetfulness
in the early days, had forcibly rebelled against
his constant espionage and irritating presence. He
had been instantly cured of the spirit of rebellion by the
sight which, with a mocking laugh, the Nubian had pointed
out to him, of Helen, kneeling by the river surrounded
by jeering women, as she washed the Arabian’s linen.</p>
<p>“And worse will happen, thou infidel, if thou dar’st
disobey my mistress’s commands. Mohammed the Prophet
of Allah decreed in his understanding that unto the faithful
should be four wives given, neither did he in his wisdom
say aught against an infidel wife being of the four.
Nay! in thine eyes I see the lust to kill. The life of the
white woman pays forfeit for my life; thy life if the white
woman essays to shorten the days of Zarah the Beautiful.”</p>
<p>For fear of something worse than death befalling the
beautiful, splendid girl he loved, he dared do nothing.
For every word, for every act of rebellion on his part,
some task even more menial than those she daily performed
would be forced upon her; for any attempt he
might make upon the Nubian’s life, to assuage his own
outraged feelings, her life would be taken.</p>
<p>And there seemed no possible way out.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Not only did the Nubian dog his footsteps, but Yussuf,
upon whom he had counted in his heart of hearts, had
failed him, and without his help nothing could be done,
no communication with Helen effected, no plans for escape
made.</p>
<p>He saw Yussuf every day seated amongst the men
gathered to learn the arts of wrestling and jiu-jitsu, and
of all the little crowd he seemed to be the only one who
still cherished his hatred for the infidel. He spat with
vigour when the white man passed, and at other times
shouted various abusive or ribald remarks, whilst urging
his brethren to down the unbeliever in the tests of strength
and cunning, for the glory of Allah the one and only
God.</p>
<p>His days were most humiliatingly mapped out for him
by the Nubian.</p>
<p>There seemed to be no satisfying the men’s craving
to master the rudiments of wrestling.</p>
<p>From two hours after sunrise until the first moment of
the great noonday heat they milled and boxed, with
intervals of single-stick and jiu-jitsu, in which they
invariably forgot instructions, lost their self-control and
temper, and almost broke each other’s legs, arms, heads
or backs.</p>
<p>The afternoons were passed in the heavy, unrefreshing
sleep induced by great heat; from the moment the sun
slipped down behind the topmost mountain peaks, throwing
deep shadows across the plateau, they were at it again
until the hour of the one big meal of the day, which takes
place about two hours after sunset.</p>
<p>The best part of the night they passed in gambling,
story telling, singing, or tearing over the desert on horseback,
Ralph Trenchard accompanying them, invariably
shadowed by the Nubian.</p>
<p>To his intense relief, Zarah left him entirely alone for
the first month. Fully aware that he was surrounded by
spies, he gave no sign of the rage which swept him each<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</SPAN></span>
time he caught sight of Helen following the Arabian,
fanning her or holding an umbrella over her; or descending
the steps to the river with a great earthenware vessel
on her shoulder, which she would fill for the tyrant’s
bath and carry up the steep steps to her dwelling.</p>
<p>Zarah had passed the month in trying to break Helen’s
splendid spirit, ignorant of the strength which real love
gives to those who, either through physical weakness or
untoward circumstances, are at the mercy of those moral
cowards who take advantage of their distress or defencelessness.
Cowards who, amongst the educated and the
ignorant, the clergy, the laity, in the highest profession
or in trade, place themselves morally on the level of the
man who kicks his dog or hits his opponent when he is
down.</p>
<p>She made no impression on the English girl.</p>
<p>Strong in her love, certain that her prayers for help
would be answered, she endured all things.</p>
<p>She waited on the Arabian hand and foot, climbed the
ladder to the golden cage, wherein Zarah lay during the
<i>siesta</i>, with coffee, sherbet, or whatever she desired, and
descended and climbed again with ever the sweetest smile
in her steady, blue eyes. She brushed and combed the
red curls until her arms ached; carried and fetched and
read aloud and looked after the birds; fanned the woman,
fetched water from the river for her bath, washed the
silken garments, and waited upon her at meals, without a
murmur on her lips or a shadow in her eyes.</p>
<p>She spoke to no one, but through the gossiping of the
women learned that the body of the surly negress had
not been discovered, and that Zarah, owing to a certain
spirit of insubordination that had lately swept through
the camp, had not dared to punish the grooms of the
kennels for their gross carelessness.</p>
<p>She was continually surrounded by the women, who,
ignorant of the lies told them, jeered at and laughed at
her and did everything in their power to make her tasks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</SPAN></span>
even yet more distasteful. When away from Zarah her
every movement was spied upon and reported.</p>
<p>She slept in a hut in which tools had been stored during
the alterations to the building, rough and infinitely uncomfortable,
but a very haven of refuge at the end of the
day when she returned, to fling herself on her knees and
pray for strength and patience.</p>
<p>If only she had known it, spies watched her at her
prayers, noting the look of peace which followed quickly
upon them, and the content with which she stretched herself
upon the bed composed of rugs flung upon the sand;
watched her asleep and at her toilette, and ran to make
report on all things, especially upon the delight she
seemed to take in combing her masses of beautiful hair
and in her bath in the river long before the dawn.</p>
<p>And when a rough hand shook Helen out of her sleep
and ordered her to Zarah’s presence, it seemed that God
had turned a deaf ear to her prayers and that fear must,
after all, dominate her splendid courage.</p>
<p>It was long after midnight when, with a heavily beating
heart, she entered the luxurious room.</p>
<p>Two Abyssinian women, nude save for a short petticoat
which stopped above the knees, stood behind the
divan upon which Zarah lay smoking a <i>naghileh</i>. She lay
and looked at Helen without a word, hating her for the
ethereal look, which heightened her beauty and had come
to her in her days of toil and privation.</p>
<p>“I am told,” she said after a while in Arabic, “that
the hut you sleep in is not clean, that your habits are
not the cleanly habits of the Mohammedan, that your
hair has not escaped contamination from the disorder
in your hut; therefore——”</p>
<p>When Helen interrupted her quickly, she looked back
at the tittering black women and laughed.</p>
<p>“How can you say such a thing! I am perfectly
clean, my clothes are in holes through being washed on
the stones, my hair....” To her own undoing and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</SPAN></span>
yet, if she had but known it, as an answer to her prayers
for help, she undid the great golden plaits and shook the
rippling mass out over her shoulders, holding long strands
at arm’s length until even the negresses exclaimed at the
glory of its sheen. “My hair is combed and brushed every
day and washed once a week; it is perfectly clean!”</p>
<p>Zarah laughed as she puffed at her hubble-bubble,
inhaling the fumes of the tobacco of Oman, which is calculated
to absolutely stun the uninitiated in its gunpowder
strength.</p>
<p>“Anyway, I do not like these tales of uncleanliness to
be spread amongst my women, Helen R-r-aynor-r,” she
said curtly at last. “I therefore have decided to keep
you beneath my eyes. You will sleep in my room, on a
mat, you will bathe under the supervision of this slave
here, who will now cut your hair off so that you are
clean.”</p>
<p>“I’ll kill her if she touches me!” Helen cried sharply,
and, gathering the glory of her hair round about her,
ran to a table upon which lay an ornamented but most
workmanlike dagger. She loved her glorious, naturally
curling hair, looking upon it, with her beautiful teeth,
as the greatest asset with which nature had endowed her.
Her lover loved it, and had often told her that she had
ensnared his heart in its golden mesh. Forgetting her
impossible position as prisoner and the utter futility of
any effort at resistance, determined to fight for the
glorious mantle which covered her to her knees, she picked
up the dagger as the two gigantic women approached her.</p>
<p>“I’ll kill the first one of you who touches me!”</p>
<p>Zarah laughed and raised her hand.</p>
<p>“Go and find Al-Asad and bid him bind the white man
and bring him here. <i>Stop!</i>”</p>
<p>Helen had thrown out her hands in surrender.</p>
<p>Even her hair would she willingly sacrifice in her
great love, everything she would sacrifice except her honour,
and that she knew was safe in a place abounding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</SPAN></span>
with deep precipices and paths where the foothold was
precarious.</p>
<p>Save for her tightly locked hands, she made no sign
when the beautiful mass lay about her feet; in fact, with
an almost superhuman effort of courage, she refrained
from touching her shorn head, and leant down instead and
picked up a handful of hair, which looked like a great
skein of golden silk.</p>
<p>“It’s a pity to waste it, Zarah,” she said gently. “Why
not stuff a pillow with it?”</p>
<p>The Arabian bit hard on the amber mouthpiece of the
<i>naghileh</i>. With her short hair curling round her face,
Helen looked like an exquisite girl of fifteen, defenceless,
helpless, and calculated to inspire pity in the heart of
almost any man.</p>
<p>“Call Namlah!” She lashed the Abyssinian across the
thigh when she had to repeat the order. “Art deaf or
bereft of the use of thy limbs, thou fool!” she screamed,
seizing the dagger from her belt and throwing it after the
rapidly retreating negress, missing her shoulder by an
inch as she emulated the speed of the ostrich through the
doorway.</p>
<p>Namlah, upon whom Helen had counted in her heart
of hearts, had failed her, and without her help nothing
could be done, no communication with Ralph effected, no
plans for escape made.</p>
<p>Of all the crowd of women who jeered and laughed at
her she seemed to be the one who cherished the greatest
hatred for her. She spat with vigour when the white girl
passed, and at other times shouted various abusive and
ribald remarks, urging the women to see that the unbeliever
performed her menial tasks thoroughly, so as to
enhance the glory of Allah the one and only God.</p>
<p>She ran in and prostrated herself before her dread
mistress, then pulled the masses of hair roughly from
under Helen’s feet and tossed it this way and that as
though it were the hair of goat or camel.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“A kerchief for thy head, O great mistress, could I
weave, or a plaited girdle set with pearls, though ’twere
wellnigh sacrilege for the middle of the believer to be
bound by the hair of the infidel. Behold the infidel looks
even like the skull of one dead, with her face like unbaked
bread and her head like unto the wing of the ostrich
plucked of its feathers.”</p>
<p>With instructions to make what she could of the silky
burden which filled both her arms, she spat or, rather,
for fear of her mistress’s humour, made the sound of
vigorous spitting in Helen’s direction, and vanished
through the doorway.</p>
<p>Helen lay on the floor that night, her beautiful shorn
head resting on her arm, and poured out her heart in
gratitude that Zarah had not seen fit to shave it completely.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>What is in the cauldron is taken out with the kitchen
spoon.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
<p>“<i>A thousand raps at the door but no salute or invitation
from within.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>During the night, in the passing of a second, for no
apparent reason and with all the Arab’s lamentable
instability, Zarah grew suddenly tired of baiting her
prisoner, and, with the extraordinary density of the
woman in love, decided to make one last endeavour to
break down Ralph Trenchard’s resistance.</p>
<p>She could not understand, and she would never be able
to get it into a mind narrowed by self-love, that one might
as well try to stem the Niagara Falls with straw or hold
a <i>must</i> elephant on a daisy-chain as to influence the invincible
love of soul-mates.</p>
<p>She decided she would offer Ralph Trenchard Helen’s
liberty. She would offer to give up her mountain home,
her freedom, her power. She would offer herself as his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</SPAN></span>
servant, his slave, to cook for him, to wait upon him,
anything to keep him by her side, no matter if he returned
her love or not, as long as he lived near her; and if that
failed, as a last resource would use the despicable lever of
the lowest type of coward.</p>
<p>To gain her end she would threaten to commit suicide.
So the night following the cutting of Helen’s hair, which
was also the night preceding a tournament, in which the
men were to show how much they had learned of the art of
pugilism, she attired herself in great splendour and summoned
Ralph Trenchard to her presence. Helen, surrounded
by women who gossiped, knelt at the river edge
rubbing silken garments on a stone, with Namlah mocking
and jeering beside her when the Abyssinian, sent to fetch
Ralph Trenchard, shouted her errand as she passed.
Helen shrank back when Namlah suddenly sprang at her
and wrenched the silken garment from her hand.</p>
<p>“Thou fool!” Namlah shrilled as she knelt. “This
wise, and this and this. The soap? Or hast thou eaten
it in thy imbecility?” She leant across Helen and snatched
at the soap, which slid into the water, then rung the
garment as though it were the neck of an offending hen
as she whispered: “Give me a message for the white
man. Zarah offers him thy freedom for his love.” Down
came the garment on the stone as though she essayed to
soften the tough carcass of some female Methuselah of
the poultry world as she screamed at the top of her voice:
“Wilt thou never learn? Did Allah in his wisdom not
teach thee even how to wash a garment? Take it and
try, lest I smite thee with it!” She flung the silken
remnant at Helen, who, eyes alight, caught it in both
hands and crashed it on the rocks until one half followed
the soap into the water, whereupon Namlah leant
across her and gripped her wrists.</p>
<p>“Fool! This wise, and this and this!”</p>
<p>The women crowded round to watch Namlah swinging
Helen’s arms like flails.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Tell him,” whispered Helen as she beat her best,
“that—— Nay, Namlah, thou tearest out my arms.
Behold, I can do no more.” She fell forward with the
woman underneath, and in the confusion whispered her
message. “Tell him I prefer death to my freedom at
such a price,” and shrank back, for the benefit of the
onlookers, when Namlah, flinging all that was left
of the washing item in her face, ran off, with much
cursing, up the path to where Yussuf waited in the
shadows.</p>
<p>And hope sprang up in Ralph Trenchard’s heart as he
climbed the steps in answer to Zarah’s summons, followed
by the Nubian at some distance.</p>
<p>Suddenly, and with a most amazing clumsiness, Yussuf
walked out from behind the great boulder straight into
his arms.</p>
<p>“Sorry!” said Trenchard shortly, as he tried to free
himself from the grasp of the infuriated Arab. “You
came out so——”</p>
<p>“Hast no thoughts for others?” shouted Yussuf at the
top of his voice. “Thine ear,” he whispered, whilst he
shook Ralph Trenchard violently. “Zarah will offer thee
thy white woman’s freedom for thy love. The white
woman prefers death to freedom without thee. She loves
thee. Nay,” he suddenly yelled, “wouldst push a blind
man to his death?” The two seemed locked in anger as
Al-Asad raced up the path. “A message,” he whispered.
“Shake me in anger. Give me a message for thy woman—give
me a message.”</p>
<p>The Nubian was close upon them.</p>
<p>Trenchard grasped the blind man and shook him.</p>
<p>“Tell her to stand fast and to fear nothing,” he whispered,
then shouted angrily. “How can I hear thy noiseless
feet on the——” He reeled as Yussuf hurled him
backwards and continued to climb the steps, whilst the
blind man filled the night air with curses.</p>
<p>Zarah was quite alone.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The Nubian, under orders, sat down upon the steps
to await developments.</p>
<p>He was well content to wait.</p>
<p>He had gauged the white man’s strength of resistance
and had no fear that he would become entangled in the
beautiful Arabian’s wiles. He smiled as he crept, as noiselessly
as a great cat, to the platform before the door and
stretched himself flat upon it, the blackest spot in the
black shadows, to listen to the woman he loved pleading
for the love of one who loved another.</p>
<p>Lost to all sense of shame as are those women who have
not learned the meaning of self-control and self-sacrifice,
Zarah pleaded with Ralph Trenchard for his continued
presence by her side. Pleaded for his company and his
comradeship so that she might enjoy the shadow of his
great good looks and actual presence whilst keeping the
substance of his love from her rival.</p>
<p>She had made the greatest mistake in her toilette.</p>
<p>None too over-dressed at the best of times, she had a
startlingly undressed appearance as she stood like a
beautiful exotic flower beside the Englishman.</p>
<p>She had not—how could she in the name of decency?—discarded
a single garment, but had donned the most
transparent outfit in her wardrobe.</p>
<p>Her feet were bare and jewelled, as were her arms,
her hands, her waist. The trousers, worn by most Arabian
women, were voluminous in their transparent folds,
her body shone through a jewelled vest which fitted her
like her skin.</p>
<p>Trenchard looked at her from head to foot, and with
the perverseness of the human mind immediately thought
of the picture Helen had made as she stood beside her
grandfather in the desperate battle; and he backed a
pace before the Arabian’s semi-nudity, whilst the
Nubian buried his face in his arm to stifle his cry of
longing.</p>
<p>“I love thee,” Zarah was saying softly, looking up at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
the man she loved with love-filled eyes. “I love thee,
R-ralph Tr-r-enchar-r-d. I have loved thee ever since I
lay against thy heart so many, many moons ago. I
will give up my home, my people, I will name Al-Asad as
ruler in my stead, I will follow thee upon the path of thy
choice, to the country that should please thee. I will
wait upon thee, serve thee, devote myself to thee, if thou
wilt give up the other woman. I love thee.”</p>
<p>“I have already told you, Zarah, that I do not love
you, could never love you.” Ralph Trenchard, loathing
the scene, spoke curtly, and stepped back quickly as
Zarah flung herself at his feet. “Do get up,” he added
in English, as he tried to loosen her grasp upon his knees.
“If only you knew how we English loathe scenes like
this, and what we think of hysterical, unbalanced
people!”</p>
<p>She sat back on her heels, lifting her hands in supplication.</p>
<p>“I offer you Helen R-raynor-r’s freedom if you will
stay with me. I do not want to keep her. Let her go
back to her own country. She is young; she will forget;
she does not know what love is. Besides, I fear my slave.
He is handsome; he, too, is young; he wishes to take a
wife. I will send Helena safely away from him if you will
stay with me.”</p>
<p>Trenchard showed no sign of the horror of the fate in
store for Helen; he spoke quite calmly, slowly, almost indifferently.</p>
<p>“You will not gain anything if you hurt Helen. If
she dies I die; if you try to harm her she will find a means
of killing herself, and I shall kill myself. Not because
of my love for her—our kind of love is higher than suicide,
it endures—but only so that you shall find no pleasure
in her death.”</p>
<p>He pulled her hands apart and stepped back as she
sprang to her feet. She failed to understand that, living
or dead, she was no more to the man than one of the birds<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
in its cage, and played what she mistakenly believed to
be her trump card.</p>
<p>“Then I will kill <i>myself</i>, R-r-alph Tr-renchar-r-d.”
She choked with rage, the r’s in the English words rolling
like little drums. “And you will never forget that upon
your head will lie the death of a woman, never be able to
wipe out the picture of my broken body lying amongst
the rocks.” She ran close up to him, shaking with the
unseemly rage of the uncontrolled woman. “I go to
my death.” She pointed through the doorway, striking
a most dramatic attitude, whilst watching for a sign
of interest in her proceedings in the man’s indifferent
face. “To my death!” she screamed as she saw none, and
fled through the doorway, missing the astounded Nubian
by an inch.</p>
<p>She stopped upon the edge of the very steep incline
and listened for the sound of footsteps hastening to her
rescue. At the absence of all sound she looked over her
shoulder, to see Ralph Trenchard, with his back to her,
lighting a cigarette. She tore back into the room with
the last shred of her restraint gone and swung him round
by the arm.</p>
<p>“Oh, you didn’t do it?” He looked her straight in the
eyes. “We have women like you in England, never very
young or very pretty, who, verging upon the sere and
yellow, and with nothing to fill their days or occupy their
minds, try to coerce the people they love by threats of
suicide. They never get what they want, either. The
slightest chain frets love, real love, you know. You can’t
inspire love just because you keep the person <i>you</i> love,
but who doesn’t love <i>you</i>, in the same house with you. You
can’t hold love by cooking or serving. Love, real love,
will thrive on a crust offered by the one loved, but will
sicken at the sight of a basket of sweetmeats offered by
anyone else.” He had no intention of giving her the
slightest cause to hope by offering her any sympathy in
her tantrums. He added coldly, cruelly, as he turned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
from her: “It’s rather a pity these silly, hysterical
women don’t carry out their threat of suicide; the world
would be no loser by their death.”</p>
<p>He backed before her as she burst into a torrent of
reproach which ended in a storm of abuse.</p>
<p>“ ... Go!” she screamed at the highest pitch of the
Arabian voice, which is none too sweet in wrath. “To-morrow
at the tournament I will decide what is best to
be done with this white woman who is not fit to mingle
with my women and children. Yea, even, owing to her dislike
of water have we cut her hair so that——”</p>
<p>She screamed and struck at Ralph Trenchard as he
caught her by the wrist and pulled her roughly to him.</p>
<p>“What did you say? You’ve cut off Helen’s hair? All
that wonderful golden mass! You have dared to do that?
Speak, can’t you!”</p>
<p>He flung her on the divan as she laughed and clapped
her hands at the sight of his horror-stricken face, and
laughed again at the plan for revenge which flashed into
her mind.</p>
<p>“So I have prevailed in making you feel, R-ralph
Tr-r-enchar-r-d,” she shouted after him as he left the
room and ran down the steps, followed by the amazed
Nubian.</p>
<p>She ran to the door and laughed until the mountains
echoed and re-echoed to the sound, then turned and flung
herself on the floor, where she gave way to the violent
hysterics of the uncontrolled, jealous woman.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />